FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The invention relates a method for reproducing images. In particular, but not exclusively
it relates to electrostatographic methods for printing reproductions of continuous
tone images. The printing proceeds on opaque reflecting supports as well as on transparent
supports.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Well accepted printing methods in an "office-environment" as e.g. ink-jet printing
and electrostatographic methods, are not used as much as would be expected when the
convenience of these methods is considered. Most of these printing methods can only
partially print continuous tone images and the continuous tone image has to be specially
treated (e.g. by a dither method) before the print can be made. In this context, a
continuous tone image or contone image is an image containing grey levels, with no
perceptible quantisation to them. This drawback has hampered the use of these very
convenient printing methods in those imaging areas where it is important to accurately
print continuous tone images as e.g. in pictorial photography, medical imagery, etc.
[0003] In ink-jet printing, a convenient printing system for use in an office environment,
it has been proposed in
EP-A-606 022 to use different inks, with different pigmentation and to use the ink with low pigmentation
to print the low densities and the ink with high pigmentation to print the high densities.
In this technique use is made of ink drops with volumes ranging from 25 to 100 µl
in the so called bubble jet based systems, or with volumes in the range of 5 to 10
µl in the so called continuous jet systems. In all cases the images are built up by
combining in an appropriate way such drops on the substrate, and although the addressability
of each drop typically lies in the range of 300 dpi (dots per inch, or dots per 25.4
mm) to 1200 dpi, the not fully reproducible way the dot spreads and penetrates in
the substrate limits the real resolution in the printed image. Hereinafter the resolution
of image will be described in dpi, a normal description in the printing business.
1 dpi (one dot per inch) equals 1 dot per 25.4 mm. Further attempts to reproduce continuous
tone images using light- and dark-coloured inks have been described in
EP-A-606 022 and
US-A-4,860,026.
[0004] Electro(stato)graphic methods are evenly well accepted imaging methods in an "office
environment" as ink-let printing since these methods, e.g. electrophotographic copiers,
electrographic printers, Direct Electrostatic Printing (DEP), are convenient, fast,
clean and do not need liquid solutions or dispersions. Since electro(stato)graphic
methods may use solid particles that typically have a particle diameter between 1
and 10 µm as marking particle, it is possible to achieve very high resolution in electro(stato)graphy.
[0005] However, most electro(stato)graphical imaging systems, are not intrinsically capable
of forming continuous tone and special measures have to be taken to print continuous
tone images.
[0006] Continuous tone printing in electrophotographic printing by a laser beam is described
in the Journal of Imaging Technol., Volume 12, n
o 6 December 1986 on pages 329 to 333 in an article entitled "Electrophotographic colour
Printing Using Elliptical Laser Beam Scanning Method". In this article a dot matrix
method, combined with pulse width modulation of the laser beam (to be able to introduce
in each dot of the matrix several density levels) and with an elliptical laser beam,
is described to achieve a continuous tone reproduction with sufficient resolution
and linearity over a tone range of 256 levels. Although with such a printing system
quality continuous tone prints can be made, there are still some problems to be addressed.
On an electrostatic photoreceptor there is a threshold level of toner adhesion : this
means that in the low density areas, where the electrostatic latent image is weak
and is situated just above that threshold, the system shows inherently some instability
in the low density areas. Also, since the low density areas are printed using very
few toner particles, the granularity (in other terms graininess or noise) in the low
density areas becomes easily objectionable for high quality prints.
[0007] In Patent Abstract of Japan vol. 007 no. 290 (p. 245), 24 December 1983 &
JP-A-58/162970 (Hitachi Seisakusho KK), 27 September 1983 a second toner having a same colour and
a lower colour density (1.0 black density) is added in a single development station
to a first toner (1.8 black density), already present in said single development station,
in a 4:1 ratio to obtain a good gradation. The gain in density resolution of the printed
image (i.e. having a continuous tone image) is rather limited.
[0008] In
US-A-5,142,337 a second toner is used, comprising a mixture of opaque black, opaque white and clear
toner. A second toner layer is applied on top of a first toner layer, comprising black
toner. In this method also, although image quality is high and very even images can
be produced, the gain in density resolution of the printed image (i.e. having a continuous
tone image) is rather limited.
[0009] In proceedings of the International Congress on Advances in Non-Impact Printing Technologies,
San Diego, Nov. 12 - 17, 1985, no. Congress 5, 12 November 1989, Moore J., pages 331-341,
Kunio Yamada et al 'Improvement of halftone dot reproducibility in laser-xerography',
the author discusses graininess of the xerographic process, mainly influenced by dot
growth.
[0010] A method for printing a continuous tone image with electro(stato)graphic printing
methods has been described in
EP-A-768 577. In this method comprising the steps of partitioning a surface of said substrate
into a plurality of disjunctive microdots and applying to at least one microdot at
least two types of toner, having substantially the same chromaticity, the intrinsic
qualities of electro(stato)graphic printing methods (speed, resolution, cleanness,
dry operationable) can be used to print continuous toner images. In that disclosure,
the stable printing of high resolution half-tone (continuous tone) images over at
least 256 printed (not only addressed) density levels is shown.
[0011] The method of that disclosure necessitates the use of different types of toner particles
and thus the use of apparatus with different toner stations containing toner particles
with the same chromaticity, but having different amounts of colorant. Thus there are
several printing stations necessary even for printing monochrome images.
[0012] This limits the usefulness of the method of
EP-A-768 577 more or less to the use of larger electrostatographic printers. There is thus still
a need for a method for stable printing of high resolution half-tone (continuous tone)
reproductions of continuous toner images over at least 128 printed (not only addressed)
density levels in simple and smaller printers
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0013] It is an object of the invention to provide a method for printing reproductions of
continuous tone images in a desktop printer using only one type of toner particles
for a given chromaticity.
[0014] It is a further object of the invention to provide a method for printing full-colour
images with low contrast and high density resolution.
[0015] Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become clear from the
detailed description hereinafter.
[0016] The object of this invention is realised by providing a method for printing a reproduction
of a continuous tone image by using toner particles, comprising the steps of :
a) creating at least two sub-images,
b) feeding image data of one of said sub-images to a printing station containing toner
particles with a first chromaticity and a first optical density,
c) image-wise applying said toner particles on an image receiving member for forming
a first toner image in correspondence with said image data and
d) repeating, with toner particles having a chromaticity substantially equal to said
first chromaticity and an optical density substantially equal to said first optical
density steps b) and c) at least once more for bringing at least one further toner
image, corresponding to a further sub-image, on said image receiving member in register
with said first toner image.
[0017] In a preferred embodiment the method is an electrostatographic method and the toner
particles are dry toner particles comprising a toner resin and a colorant.
DEFINITIONS
[0018] The wording "image or reproduction with high density resolution" is throughout this
text used for indicating a high resolution half-tone (continuous tone) image with
at least 123 printed (not only addressed) density levels.
[0019] The wording "monochrome image" has in this document to be understood as "an image
made in a single colour", it can be black and white but it can also be any other combination
of a single colour and white, e.g. an image in cyan and white is a monochrome image.
An image in a single hue on a coloured background, e.g. an image in black on a blue
transparent base is also a monochrome image. Also a colour separation of a full-colour
image is considered in this text as a monochrome image.
[0020] The wording "density separation of an image" is in this document used to indicate
a sub-image containing a range of density levels that is less than the total range
of optical density levels in the image. After printing all density separations, a
"full-density" image is obtained. This is analogous with the well known colour separations
of a colour image.
[0021] The wording "image" is used to describe pictures, text, drawings, graphs, etc.
[0022] The wording "image receiving member" is used in this text to indicate a receiver
whereon at least two sub-images, made with toner particles having the same chromaticity
and same optical density are received in register with each other. Depending on the
concept of the printer used to implement the method of this invention, the "image
receiving member" is the final substrate, an intermediate image receiving member from
where the image is transferred to the final substrate, or a photoconductive member
from where the image is transferred either to the final substrate or to an intermediate
member.
[0023] The wording "substantially equal chromaticity" or "substantially the same chromaticity"
means that, as expressed in the approximately uniform CIE L*a*b* color space, the
following holds:

wherein Δa and Δb are the difference in hue and saturation respectively. Chromaticity
describes objectively hue and saturation of a color, and may be measured in terms
of CIE x,y or u',v' (cfr. "The reproduction of color in photography, printing & television"
by R.W.G. Hunt, 4th edition 1987, ISBN 0 86343 088 0, pp. 71-72).
[0024] The wording "optical density of toner particles" is in this document used to indicate
the optical reflection density of an even patch made by depositing a given amount
of said toner particles on a reflective substrate and fixing it.
[0025] The wording "substantially equal optical density" or "substantially the same optical
density" means that for a given amount of toner deposited and fixed on a reflective
surface the optical reflection density of the various toners differ less than 0.10
D.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0026] The essence of the method of the invention lays in the finding that by dividing an
image in at least two sub-images and by printing these sub-images in register using
toner particles with substantially the same chromaticity and substantially the same
optical density for each sub-image, small printers could be used for printing reproductions
of continuous toner images wherein the reproduction had a high density resolution.
This showed to be an improvement over the method presented in
EP-A-768 577 wherein several type of toner particles were necessary and wherein the printing proceeded
in printers having two or more printing stations.
[0027] Basically the method of the invention comprises the steps of defining several sub-images,
printing one of the sub-images with toner particles with a first chromaticity and
a first optical density, and then repeating once more the printing with a different
or the same sub-image, but in any case with toner particles with a chromaticity equal
to the first chromaticity and an optical density equal to the first optical density.
[0028] I.e. in the method according to this invention at least two of the sub-images making
up the final image are printed with toner particles having substantially the same
chromaticity and the substantially the same optical density.
[0029] Thus the method according to this invention is a multi-pass printing method that
differs from the multi-pass methods for printing colour images in that at least in
two passes toner particles with substantially the same chromaticity and substantially
the same optical density are used. Preferably the toner particles for printing the
sub-images are provided from a single printing station, so that very small printers
can be used;
[0030] It is preferred in the method according to this invention to have the original continuous
tone image available in form of digital image data. The digital image data can be
directly available such as image date from a digital still camera, from a medical
CT-scan, images obtained in the field of non-destructive testing, images obtained
from digital projection radiography, etc.. Both medical images (images of a part of
the human body) as images from the field of non-destructive testing ( images of part
of an object) are termed "diagnostic images". The digital image data can also be obtained
indirectly by scanning and digitising the analogue continuos tone image. On the basis
of the digital image data (the electronic original image) the image data corresponding
to the sub--images (i.e. the density separations) are produced electronically.
[0031] The method according to this invention, for printing a reproduction of continuous
tone images the method proceeds basically as follows:
a) if the continuous tone original is not directly available as an electronic image,
it is converted to an electronic image,
b) at least two density separations of an image are electronically created, forming
at least two sub-images,
b) image data corresponding to a first sub-image (a first density separation) are
fed to a printing station containing toner particles with a first chromaticity and
a first optical density,
c) a toner image corresponding to said image-data is brought on to an image receiving
member,
d) image data corresponding to a further sub-image (a further density separation)
are fed to a printing station wherein toner particles, with substantially the same
chromaticity and substantially the same optical density as the toner particles used
in step a) are present, and
e) a toner image corresponding to said image-data of said further sub-image is brought
on to said same image receiving member in register with toner images already present
on said image receiving member.
[0032] The steps d) and e) are repeated until all sub-images are printed.
[0033] It was found that printing of reproductions of continuous tone images could be achieved
in small printers when the toner particles used for printing contained a low degree
of pigmentation. Dry toner particles with low pigmentation are, for sake of this invention,
toner particles having such a degree of pigmentation that the optical reflection density
of an even patch of fixed toner particles on a reflecting substrate is between 0.1
and 1.00 when 0.5 mg/cm
2 of toner particles are deposited. Preferably the toner particles for use in the method
according to this invention have a pigmentation so that the optical reflection density
of an even patch of fixed toner particles on a reflecting substrate is between 0.2
and 0.80 when 0.5 mg/cm
2 of toner particles are deposited
[0034] In the method the image to be printed is divided in sub-images according to different
optical density levels. When the method is used for printing monochrome images, only
density separations are made, when the method is used for colour printing then several
density separations for one or all colour separations are used.
[0035] The method can, e.g., for a monochrome image, proceed as follows:
in a first pass image data of the density separation with the lowest optical density
are provided to the printing station and are printed with the toner particles with
low pigmentation, in a second pass image data of a density separation with higher
optical density are provided to the printing station and are printed in register,
with the same marking material, and so on until all density separations are printed.
[0036] It is clear that in the method of this invention, although a preferred way to proceed
is printing the sub-images (i.e. the density separations) in ascending order of densities,
the printing order of the different density separations can be freely be chosen, the
printing can even proceed in random order.
[0037] The effect is that in the lowest density areas of the image a single layer of marking
material is present, while in the higher optical density areas two or more layers
of marking material are present on top of each other.
[0038] The method can also be used to print full colour images with high density resolution.
In that case the method can, e.g., be implemented as follows:
[0039] In a first cycle image data corresponding to a density separation with low optical
density of the yellow colour separation, to a density separation with low optical
density of the magenta colour separation, to a density separation with low optical
density of the cyan colour separation, and to a density separation with low optical
density of the black colour separation are provided in the printing stations and are
printed in register on an image receiving member. In a second cycle image data corresponding
to a density separation with higher optical density of the yellow colour separation,
to a density separation with higher optical density of the magenta colour separation,
to a density separation with higher optical density of the cyan colour separation
and to a density separation with higher optical density of the black colour separation,
are provided to the printing stations and are printed on said image receiving member
in register with each other and with the first optical density separation of the four
colour separations. The steps are repeated until all density separations are printed.
[0040] It is, in a method according to this invention, also possible to print first all
yellow density separations in register on the image receiving member, followed by
the magenta density separations, the cyan density separation and the black density
separations. Basically the order in which density separations are printed in a method
of this invention can be chosen with respect to the type of printer used to implement
the method, without deviating from the invention, since in any case at least two monochrome
density separations are printed in register on an image receiving member using toner
particles with the same chromaticity and the same optical density.
[0041] The method of this invention can be implemented with several kinds of non-impact
printing technologies. They can be used with ink-jet printing when the ink that is
used contains a low amount of colorant (dyes and/or pigment). It is however preferred
to implement the methods of this invention in printers based on magnetographic or
electrostatographic methods using either liquid toners or dry toner particles.
[0042] The method according to this invention for printing continuous tone images is well
suited for being implemented in magnetography, since in that technique the printing
of continuous tone images is not simple, as the technique itself does not allow for
printing images with high density resolution.
[0043] In the most preferred embodiment of this invention, the method of this invention,
is implemented in electrostatographic printers using dry toner particles as marking
material.
[0044] A great advantage of the method for printing a reproduction of a continuous tone
images, according to this invention over the prior art methods is the fact that when
printing monochrome images with high density resolution there is only one type of
toner necessary instead of several. This simplifies the stock keeping at the users
place and avoids the possibility of erroneously mixing up the toner types when refilling
the different containers. Moreover the method can be implemented for printing monochrome
images with high density resolution in printers having a single printing station with
a single container for toner, thus in small table top printers.
[0045] Electrostatographic printers for implementing the methods according to this invention,
can be printers using the steps of:
i) forming of an electrostatic latent image on an electrostatic latent image bearing
member (e.g. by ionography or image-wise removing charges from a uniformly charged
photoconductive member, as in classical electrophotography),
ii) developing said latent image forming a toner image on said latent image bearing
member and
iii) transferring said toner image to an image receiving member.
[0046] Other electrostatographic printers useful for implementing the methods according
to this invention are printers based on the principle of direct electrostatic printing
(DEP). In such printers a flow of charged toner particles is created in an electric
field from a toner reservoir to the substrate to be printed. In the flow of toner
particles a printhead structure with printing apertures equipped for image-wise modulating
said flow of toner particles is interposed and the toner image is formed directly
on the final substrate ( or if so wished first on an intermediate member, from where
it is transferred to the final substrate), without the intervention of an electrostatic
latent image. DEP printers have been disclosed in, e.g.,
US-A-3,689,935; GB-A-2,108,432, US-A-5,202,704, EP-A-812 696, EP-A-763 785 and
EP-A-816 944. A DEP printer wherein the image is first deposited on an intermediate member and
then transferred to the final substrate has, e.g., been disclosed in
EP-A-743 572.
[0047] When using an electrophotographic printer for implementing the methods according
to this invention, several embodiments are useful.
[0048] In a first embodiment of a printer useful for implementing the methods according
to this invention, the printing station comprises a photoconductive member whereon
an electrostatic latent image is formed, e.g., by laser exposure, in accordance to
image data and comprises means for supplying charged toner particles to that latent
image. This means for supplying charged toner particles can contain a container for
developer and a magnetic brush with mono-component magnetic toner particles, or a
magnetic brush with a multi component developer comprising magnetic carrier particles
and non-magnetic toner particles. The means for supplying charged toner particles
to the latent image can also be a container with non-magnetic mono-component developer.
Each sub-image is formed and developed on the photoconductive member and from there
transferred to the final substrate. Then the photoconductive member is cleaned and
a new latent image, corresponding to a further sub-image is developed on the photoconductive
member and from there transferred to the final substrate. In this case the different
sub-images are formed one after one on the photoconductive drum and one after one
transferred to the final substrate which passes back and forth
or is rotated on a drum in the vicinity of the photoconductive member. In this embodiment the "image receiving
member" is the final substrate.
[0049] An example of a small electrophotographic printer that can be adapted for the implementation
of the method of this invention is disclosed in
EP-A-569 744. The printer disclosed in that document is a multi-pass colour printer.
[0050] In a first pass, a latent image corresponding to, e.g., a yellow colour separation
is formed on a photoconductive drum, developed with yellow toner, the substrate is
positioned near the drum and the yellow toner image is transferred to the substrate
from said drum. The substrate is then removed from the vicinity of the drum. In a
second pass, a latent image corresponding to, e.g., a magenta image separation is
formed on the drum, developed with magenta toner, the substrate is again positioned
near the drum for transferring the magenta toner image in register with the yellow
image, the substrate is removed again from the vicinity of the drum. In a third and
fourth pass the cyan and black image separations are so transferred to the substrate
in register with the earlier deposited image separation, thus forming a full colour
image.
[0051] When in this printer, instead of filling the four toner containers each containing
a toner with a specific colour, the four toner containers are filled with the same
toner (same chromaticity and optical density) with low pigmentation, the printer can
without much modification be used for implementing the method according to this invention
when printing monochrome images.
[0052] Also the printer sold by SHARP KK of Japan under trade name JX-8200 is very suitable
for the implementation of the first embodiment of this invention. Also in this printer,
the different sub-images are formed one after one on the photoconductive drum and
one after one transferred to the final substrate
[0053] In a further embodiment of a printer useful for implementing the methods according
to this invention, the printing station comprises a photoconductive member whereon
an electrostatic latent image is formed, e.g., by laser exposure, in accordance to
image data and comprises means for supplying charged toner particles to that latent
image. This means for supplying charged toner particles can contain a container for
developer and a magnetic brush with mono-component magnetic toner particles, or a
magnetic brush with a multi component developer comprising magnetic carrier particles
and non-magnetic toner particles. The means for supplying charged toner particles
to the latent image can also be a container with non-magnetic mono-component developer.
Each sub-image is formed and developed on the photoconductive member and from there
transferred to an intermediate image receiving member. Then the photoconductive member
is cleaned and a new latent image, corresponding to a further sub-image is developed
on the photoconductive member and from there transferred to said intermediate image
receiving member. In this case the different sub-images are formed one after one on
the photoconductive drum and one after one transferred, in register, to an intermediate
image receiving member which passes in the vicinity of the photoconductive member.
Once all sub-images are collected on the intermediate image receiving member, the
totality of the sub-images is transferred to the final substrate. In this case the
intermediate image receiving member is the "image receiving member".
[0054] In still a further embodiment for implementing the methods according to this invention
in an electrophotographic printer, a plurality of sub-images (even all sub-images)
are developed on the photoconductive member on top of each other and the sub-images
brought in register on the photoconductive member are then transferred either directly
to the final substrate or first to an intermediate image receiving member and from
there to the final substrate. In this case the photoconductive drum is "the image
receiving member" This implementation has the advantage that the printer works faster
than a printer wherein the "image receiving member" is either the final substrate
or an intermediate member.
[0055] Printers useful for implementing the methods according to this invention while printing
full-colour images with high density resolution are e.g. electrophotographic printers
wherein normally the four colour separations (Yellow, Magenta, Cyan and Black) are
brought in register on the photoconductive drum and then together transferred to the
substrate. Such printers have been described in e.g.
EP-A-143 535, EP-A-625 731 and
US-A-5,418,097.
[0056] The containers for toner are filled, instead of with Y,M,C,K toners giving full density,
with Y, M, C and K toners having a lower pigmentation as described herein above. In
a first pass density separations with low optical density of the Y,M,C,K image separations
are in register brought on the photoconductive drum and then transferred to the substrate.
The substrate is removed from the vicinity of the drum and in a second pass further
density separation with higher optical density of the Y, M, C, K image separations
are in register brought on the photoconductive drum, the substrate brought again to
the vicinity of the drum and the four colour separations with higher density are then
transferred to the substrate. The cycle is repeated as long as necessary to print
all density separations. When printing full-colour images with high density resolution
with a method according to this invention, it also possible in a first cycle to take
the first monochrome image, e.g. the yellow colour separation, to generate density
separations of the yellow colour separation and print all yellow density separations;
then, in a second cycle, to take the second monochrome image, e.g. the magenta colour
separation, to generate density separations or the magenta colour separation and print
all magenta density separations; then, in a third cycle, to take the third monochrome
image, e.g. the cyan colour separation, to generate density separations of the cyan
colour separation and print all cyan density separations and to take the fourth monochrome
image, e.g. the black colour separation, to generate density separations of the black
colour separation and print black density separations. The sequence of printing the
different colours and or the different density separations can freely be chosen, without
departing from the method according to this invention.
[0057] The same possibility, of printing full colour images with high resolution, exist
when implementing the methods of this invention in a DEP device wherein the density
separations of each of the colour separations are printed on an intermediate member
and then transferred to a final substrate. Such a method can beneficially be implemented
in a DEP device as disclosed in
EP-A-743 572.
[0058] It is clear that the method according to this invention can be combined with other
means for printing images with high density resolution by using toner particles. E.g.
screening, dithering techniques, etc. can be combined with the method of this invention.
[0059] The toner particles for use in both method for printing a continuous tone image on
an opaque reflecting substrate as well as on a transparent substrate according to
the present invention, can essentially be of any nature as well with respect to their
composition, shape, size, and preparation method and the sign of their tribo-electrically
acquired charge.
[0060] The toner particles used in accordance with the present invention may comprise any
conventional resin binder.
[0061] The binder resins used for producing toner particles according to the present invention
may be addition polymers e.g. polystyrene or homologues, styrene/acrylic copolymers,
styrene/methacrylate copolymers, styrene/acrylate/acrylonitrile copolymers or mixtures
thereof. Addition polymers suitable for the use as a binder resin in the production
of toner particles according to the present invention are disclosed e.g. in
BE 61.855/70, DE 2,352,604, DE 2,506,086,
US-P 3,740,334.
[0062] Also polycondensation polymers may be used in the production of toner particles according
to the present invention. Polyesters prepared by reacting organic carboxylic acids
(di- or tricarboxylic acids) with polyols (di- or triol) are the most preferred polycondensation
polymers. The carboxylic acid may be e.g. maleic acid, fumaric acid, phthalic acid,
isophthalic acid, terephthalic acid, trimellitic acid, etc or mixtures thereof. The
polyol component may be ethyleneglycol, diethylene glycol, polyethylene glycol, a
bisphenol such as 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-propane called "bisphenol A" or an alkoxylated
bisphenol, a trihydroxy alcohol, etc, or mixtures thereof. Polyesters, suitable for
use in the preparation of toner particles according to the present invention are disclosed
in e.g.
US-P 3,590,000, US-P 3,681,106, US-P 4,525,445, US-P 4,657,837, US-P 5,153,301.
[0063] It is also possible to use a blend of addition polymers and polycondensation polymers
in the preparation of toner particles according to the present invention as disclosed
e.g. in
US-P 4,271,249.
[0064] In order to modify or improve the triboelectric chargeability in either negative
or positive direction the toner particles may contain (a) charge control agent(s).
[0065] The toner powder particles useful in a method according to the present invention
may be prepared by mixing the above defined binder resin(s) and ingredients (e.g.
a pigment or dye, an inorganic filler, a charge controlling agent,) in the melt phase,
e.g. using a kneader. The kneaded mass has preferably a temperature in the range of
90 to 140 °C, and more preferably in the range of 105 to 120 °C. After cooling, the
solidified mass is crushed, e.g. in a hammer mill and the obtained coarse particles
further broken e.g. by a jet mill to obtain sufficiently small particles from which
a desired fraction can be separated by sieving, wind classification, cyclone separation
or other classifying techniques.
[0066] The toner particles useful according to the present invention may also be prepared
by a "polymer suspension" process. In this process the toner resin (polymer) is dissolved
in a water immiscible solvent with low boiling point and the toner ingredients (e.g.az
pigment or dye, an inorganic filler, a charge controlling agent, etc.) are dispersed
in that solution. The resulting solution/dispersion is dispersed/suspended in an aqueous
medium that contains a stabiliser. The organic solvent is evaporated and the resulting
particles are dried. The evaporation of the solvent can proceed by increasing temperature,
by vacuum evaporation, by spray-drying as described in, e.g.
US-P 3,166,510, US-P 3,338,991, electrostatic pulverising as described in, e.g.
GB-A-2,121,203, etc.
[0067] The toner particles can comprise any pigment or dye (further on pigment is used to
designate dyes as well as pigments) known in the art. When the method is used for
printing mono-chrome black image the pigment is preferably carbon black. For preparing
toner particles with other colours a list of suitable dyes or pigments are disclosed
in e.g. EP-A-601 235, that is included herein by reference.
[0068] The powder toner particles useful according to the present invention may be used
as mono-component developer (magnetic as well as non-magnetic), i.e. in the absence
of carrier particles as well as in a two-component system comprising carrier particles.
[0069] When the method according to this invention is implemented with magnetographic printing
stations, the toner particles will also comprise magnetic pigments.
[0070] When used in admixture with carrier particles, 2 to 10 % by weight of toner particles
is present in the whole developer composition. Proper mixing with the carrier particles
may be obtained in a tumble mixer.
[0071] Toner particles useful in this invention can have an average volume diameter (d
v50) between 3 and 20 µm, preferably between 5 and 15 µm and more preferably between
5 and 7 µm. The particle size distribution of said toner particles can be of any type.
It is however preferred to have an essentially (some negative or positive skewness
can be tolerated, although a positive skewness, giving less smaller particles than
an unskewed distribution, is preferred) Gaussian or normal particle size distribution,
either by number or volume, with a coefficient of variability (standard deviation
divided by the average) (ν) smaller than 0.5, more preferably of 0.3.
[0072] Suitable carrier particles for use in cascade or magnetic brush development are described
e.g. in
GB-B 1,438,110. For magnetic brush development the carrier particles may be on the basis of ferromagnetic
material e.g. steel, nickel, iron beads, ferrites and the like or mixtures thereof.
The ferromagnetic particles may be coated with a resinous envelope or are present
in a resin binder mass as described e.g. in
US-P 4,600,675. The average particle size of the carrier particles is preferably in the range of
20 to 300 µm and more preferably in the range of 30 to 100 µm.
[0073] In a particularly interesting embodiment iron carrier beads of a diameter in the
range of 50 to 200 µm coated with a thin skin of iron oxide are used. Carrier particles
with spherical shape can be prepared according to a process described in
GB-A-1,174,571. Carrier beads comprising a core and coated with a Si-containing resin are preferred
for use according to the present invention. Such carrier beads have been described
in e.g.
US-P 4,977,054 ;
US-P 4,927,728 and
EP-A 650 099.